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Is easier to program in vfp than .net?
Message
From
10/04/2012 16:16:59
 
 
To
10/04/2012 15:58:02
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Visual FoxPro and .NET
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01540749
Message ID:
01540885
Views:
64
In my mind that's not what really happened. Microsoft bought Fox, but never marketed it, and when you asked more or less any Microsoft employee about Fox, they usually tried to convice you to use another product, like Access or SQL server. When I many years ago contacted Microsoft Norway and asked them about Visual Foxpro, I was told that they could not help me because Visual Foxpro was not a Microsoft product. So Microsoft slowly but knowingly killed Fox, since other products earned them more money.

>That's not what I said at all. What I said is that Microsoft *DOES* listen to developers and has added features in both VFP and .Net/VS/C#/VB/etc as a result of those requests.
>
>Now, if you're saying that MS didn't listen to customers who wanted VFP to live on, you're still not paying attention. The number of people using...and from Microsoft's view, buying...VFP every year was decreasing. That to me, says, "Customers have moved on to other things." The cost of maintaining the VFP team was greater than the revenue it generated.
>
>If you think Microsoft is the only company that does this, I'll point to Sony (Betamax), General Motors (Humvee, Pontiac, Saturn), Ford (Mercury), American Motors (completely gone), Sun (gone), Apple's change to Intel chips, and the list can go on.
>
>Publicly traded companies are NOT in the business of pleasing customers. They are in the business of increasing shareholder value. If some product reduces that value, the product is generally discontinued. As a small company, you personally can talk directly with every one of your customers. Ballmer cannot possibly do that at Microsoft. He *has* to rely on employees to listen and make the product decisions that are best for increasing shareholder value for the product they work on.
>
>Think of this another way, if one of your customers gives you less and less business, and another gives you more and more, which one will get the most of your attention and time? That's what happened with Fox vs. .Net.
>
>>(<_<)
>>I lost the trail.
>>All you state below is what I say. Microsoft needs to be forced or the people to on there own. Is this really the way you like to deal with?
>>Part of the why my customers stay with me (and I'm a start up) is that I solve there requests and listen to them the first way - and not voluntaray my employees.
>>
>>Lutz
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